Samuel Serrano

Samuel Serrano (born November 17, 1952) is a Puerto Rican former professional boxer who competed from 1969 to 1984 and made a two-fight comeback from 1996 to 1997. He was a two-time super featherweight world champion, having held the WBA title twice between 1976 and 1983.

Samuel Serrano
Born (1952-11-17) November 17, 1952 (age 71)
Toa Alta, Puerto Rico
NationalityPuerto Rican
Other namesEl Torbellino (The Whirlwind)
Statistics
Weight(s)
Height5 ft 8+12 in (174 cm)
Reach71 in (180 cm)
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights57
Wins50
Wins by KO17
Losses6
Draws1

According to Serrano during a 2017 interview with El Nuevo Dia newspaper, he learned to box starting at age 5 when he lived at Palmarejos barrio in Corozal.[1]

Professional boxing career

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External videos
You may watch Samuel Serrano vs Benedicto Villablanca on YouTube

Serrano, owner of long arms, began his career on October 29, 1969, with a third-round knockout win over Ramon Laureano. He built a fan base in Puerto Rico, campaigning there for his first 23 bouts, including winning and losing the Puerto Rican Featherweight title v.s Francisco Villegas. For his 24th bout, he traveled to Panama City, where he met future world Featherweight champion Ernesto Marcel, who beat him on points in 10 rounds. That would be his last defeat in a long time.

He then continued his winning ways, including a 10-round decision win over tough veteran Cocoa Perez and one win over former title challenger Diego Alcala, also by decision in 10. Serrano then travelled in 1976 to Honolulu, Hawaii, to meet reigning Lineal and WBA world jr. Lightweight champion, the Filipino Ben Villaflor. By most writer's accounts, Serrano beat Villaflor, but he had to return home only with a 15-round draw (tie).

The WBA ordered an immediate rematch, and so on October 16 of the same year, Villaflor went to San Juan to defend his title for the second time vs. Serrano. Serrano beat Villaflor by using his ring technique to win 12 of the 15 rounds on each judges' scorecards. As life had it, Samuel Serrano was destined to become a world champion in front of his fans.[2]

Serrano became a traveling champion, defending his title in places like Venezuela, Ecuador, South Africa, Japan (twice) and, of course, Puerto Rico. One of his defenses, against Julio "Diablito" Valdez, resulted in an after-fight brawl when Serrano was announced as winner by a unanimous decision and went to greet his rival but was received with a punch to the face.[3] Serrano retaliated, and police intervention was needed. Both fighters were escorted to their dressing rooms by the police. But disaster struck for Serrano in Detroit on August 2 of 1980, when, after leading on all scorecards, he was struck by a Yasutsune Uehara right hand to the chin in round six, and lost his title by knockout to the Japanese. After that loss, he set his eyes on recovering his world title from the Japanese world champion, and so on April 9, 1981, they met again, this time in Wakayama, Japan. Serrano was more cautious this time, and didn't try to go for the knockout after building a points lead. Even though Uehara was fighting in his homeland, all judges agreed and gave Serrano more rounds than they gave Uehara, and Serrano the world title back by a fifteen-round unanimous decision.

Serrano made two defenses and then went to Chile to give challenger Benedicto Villablanca a chance at the title on June 3, 1982. It proved to be a highly controversial fight. After 5 rounds, Serrano was ahead on the scorecards. However, a cut appeared over his eye during the 6th, and the referee ruled it to be from a punch. Serrano kept fighting, but during the 11th round, the cut was so deep, the fight had to be stopped by the doctor and Serrano had to be taken to a Santiago hospital. Since the referee ruled the cut came from a punch, initially the fight and the world title were given to Villablanca.

Serrano and his corner filed a complaint, however, claiming the cut had been caused by a headbutt instead, and upon review at the WBA's Panama City offices, WBA officials announced they had effectively seen the headbutt that Serrano claimed opened his cut happen. So the WBA decided the cut had come from a headbutt, and the judges' scorecards were reviewed. They had Serrano ahead on points after 10 rounds, so the fight, and the crown, were given back to Serrano by a technical decision.

In his next defense he met the younger and physically stronger Roger Mayweather. Serrano and Mayweather gave it a good fight for most of 7 rounds, but Serrano was weakened by a barrage of punches towards the end of the 7th, and downed with a right hand in the 8th, this time, losing the title definitively.

Retirement

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Serrano retired from the ring for one year and came back in 1984, winning by first round knockout. Then, he retired again.

In 1996, Serrano won the Puerto Rican Lightweight title vs Sammy Mejias on a 12-round decision, and he also won a 10-round decision vs Anthony Ivory in 1997. Serrano retired after the Ivory fight with a final record of 50 wins, 5 defeats and 17 knockouts.

He made a television commercial for Budweiser in Puerto Rico in 1982.

As of 2017, Serrano was living in a beach house at Islote, ciudad de Arecibo. He dedicated himself to fixing beachfront apartments and renting them, as well as to creating mosaic art, some of which he sold.[4]

Professional boxing record

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57 fights50 wins6 losses
By knockout172
By decision334
Draws1
No.ResultRecordOpponentTypeRoundDateLocationNotes
57Win50–6–1Anthony IvoryPTS10Nov 6, 1997Dorado, Puerto Rico
56Win49–6–1Sammy MejiasUD10Jul 14, 1996Bayamon, Puerto Rico
55Win48–6–1Candido SantamariaKO1 (?)May 26, 1984Mets Pavilion, Guaynabo, San Juan, Puerto Rico
54Loss47–6–1Roger MayweatherTKO8 (15)Jan 19, 1983Hiram Bithorn Stadium, San Juan, Puerto RicoLost WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
53Win47–5–1Benedicto VillablancaTD11 (15)Jul 5, 1982Teatro Caupolican, Santiago, ChileRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
52Win46–5–1Hikaru TomonariTKO12 (15)Dec 10, 1981Coliseo Roberto Clemente, San Juan, Puerto RicoRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
51Win45–5–1Leonel HernandezUD15July 29, 1981El Poliedro, Caracas, VenezuelaRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
50Win44–5–1Yasutsune UeharaUD15Apr 9, 1981Prefectural Gymnasium, Wakayama, JapanWon WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
49Win43–5–1Jesus DelgadoKO2 (?)Sep 20, 1980San Juan, Puerto Rico
48Loss42–5–1Yasutsune UeharaKO6 (15)Aug 2, 1980Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.Lost WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
47Win42–4–1Battlehawk KazamaTKO13 (15)Apr 3, 1980Central Gymnasium, Nara, JapanRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
46Win41–4–1Nkosana MgxajiTKO8 (15)Dec 9, 1979Goodwood Showgrounds, Cape Town, South AfricaRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
45Win40–4–1Julio ValdezUD15Feb 18, 1979San Juan, Puerto RicoRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
44Win39–4–1Takao MarukiUD15Nov 29, 1978Aichi Prefectural Gym, Nagoya, JapanRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
43Win38–4–1Young Ho OhRTD9 (15)Jul 8, 1978San Juan, Puerto RicoRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
42Win37–4–1Mario MartínezUD15Feb 18, 1978San Juan, Puerto RicoRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
41Win36–4–1Tae-Ho KimTKO10 (15)Nov 19, 1977San Juan, Puerto RicoRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
40Win35–4–1Apollo YoshioUD15Aug 27, 1977San Juan, Puerto RicoRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
39Win34–4–1Leonel HernandezUD15Jul 26, 1977Gimnasio Luis Ramos, Puerto La Cruz, VenezuelaRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
38Win33–4–1Alberto HerreraKO11 (15)Jan 15, 1977Plaza de Toros, Guayaquil, EcuadorRetained WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
37Win32–4–1Ben VillaflorUD15Oct 16, 1976San Juan, Puerto RicoWon WBA and The Ring super featherweight titles
36Win31–4–1Adrian VillanuevaKO2 (?)Sep 10, 1976Bayamon, Puerto Rico
35Win30–4–1Mar BasaTKO9 (10)May 8, 1976Bayamon, Puerto Rico
34Draw29–4–1Ben VillaflorSD15Apr 13, 1976Blaisdell Center Arena, Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.For WBA, and The Ring super featherweight titles
33Win29–4Maneul RodriguezTKO6 (?)Dec 13, 1975San Juan, Puerto Rico
32Win28–4Diego AlcalaPTS10Oct 11, 1975San Juan, Puerto Rico
31Win27–4Ahmet TosciKO2 (10)Sep 1, 1975San Juan, Puerto Rico
30Win26–4Victor EchegarayPTS10Jul 28, 1975San Juan, Puerto Rico
29Win25–4Jose PenaPTS10Apr 12, 1975San Juan, Puerto Rico
28Win24–4Memo CruzPTS10Nov 15, 1974San Juan, Puerto Rico
27Win23–4Ezequiel Cocoa SanchezPTS10Jul 29, 1974San Juan, Puerto Rico
26Win22–4Gustavo BricenoKO10 (12)Jul 15, 1974San Juan, Puerto RicoWon Puerto Rican featherweight title
25Win21–4Lorenzo TrujilloPTS10Apr 15, 1974San Juan, Puerto Rico
24Loss20–4Ernesto MarcelSD10Dec 5, 1973Gimnasio Nuevo Panama, Panama City, Panama
23Win20–3Jose Issac MartinPTS10Jul 21, 1973San Juan, Puerto Rico
22Win19–3Freddie MajorKO1 (10)Jun 10, 1973San Juan, Puerto Rico
21Win18–3Terry RondeauKO2 (?)Apr 14, 1973Carolina, Puerto Rico
20Win17–3John HowardPTS10Mar 24, 1973Carolina, Puerto Rico
19Win16–3Nestor RojasPTS10Feb 16, 1973San Juan, Puerto Rico
18Win15–3Angel RiveraPTS12Dec 9, 1972Ponce, Puerto Rico
17Loss14–3Francisco VillegasPTS12Apr 8, 1972San Juan, Puerto RicoLost Puerto Rican featherweight title
16Win14–2Angel RiveraPTS10Dec 4, 1971Ponce, Puerto Rico
15Win13–2Francisco VillegasPTS12Oct 25, 1971San Juan, Puerto RicoWon Puerto Rican featherweight title
14Win12–2Braulio RodriguezPTS10July 3, 1971San Juan, Puerto Rico
13Win11–2Gustavo BricenoPTS10May 15, 1971Ponce, Puerto Rico
12Loss10–2Fremio JimenezPTS10Mar 24, 1971Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
11Win10–1Wilson YamboPTS10Feb 4, 1971Ponce, Puerto Rico
10Win9–1Modesto ConcepcionPTS8Oct 31, 1970San Juan, Puerto Rico
9Win8–1Ramon DominguezPTS6Jun 6, 1970San Juan, Puerto Rico
8Win7–1Modesto ConcepcionPTS6May 9, 1970San Juan, Puerto Rico
7Win6–1Robert GuerreroPTS6Apr 11, 1970San Juan, Puerto Rico
6Win5–1Ramon MontesPTS6Mar 14, 1970San Juan, Puerto Rico
5Win4–1Modesto EscaleraPTS6Feb 14, 1970San Juan, Puerto Rico
4Win3–1Sammy CorreaTKO3 (?)Jan 17, 1970San Juan, Puerto Rico
3Loss2–1Enrique RoquePTS4Dec 12, 1969San Juan, Puerto Rico
2Win2–0Radames PizzarroPTS4Nov 13, 1969San Juan, Puerto Rico
1Win1–0Ramon LaureanoKO3 (?)Nov 1, 1969San Juan, Puerto Rico

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Samuel Serrano es un torbellino que ahora reposa". 4 March 2017.
  2. ^ "Samuel Serrano - Lineal Jr. Lightweight Champion". The Cyber Boxing Zone Encyclopedia.
  3. ^ "Sammy Serrano vs Julio "Diablito" Valdez". YouTube.
  4. ^ "Samuel Serrano es un torbellino que ahora reposa". 4 March 2017.
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Sporting positions
World boxing titles
Preceded by WBA super featherweight champion
October 16, 1976 - August 2, 1980
Succeeded by
The Ring super featherweight champion
October 16, 1976 - August 2, 1980
Preceded by
Yasutsune Uehara
WBA super featherweight champion
April 9, 1981 - January 19, 1983
Succeeded by
The Ring super featherweight champion
April 9, 1981 - January 19, 1983